What's the difference between purveyance and requisition?

Purveyance


Definition:

  • (n.) The act or process of providing or procuring; providence; foresight; preparation; management.
  • (n.) That which is provided; provisions; food.
  • (n.) A providing necessaries for the sovereign by buying them at an appraised value in preference to all others, and oven without the owner's consent. This was formerly a royal prerogative, but has long been abolished.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) He listed (1) a self-agency, representing the recognition of one's volition and capacity to act; (2) a sense of self-coherence, representing a sentience of what remains constant within one's own purveyance; (3) a sense of self-affectivity, representing the recognition of feelings, that is, the subjective aspect of affective living; and (4) a sense of self-history, representing a registration of continuity and a recognition of what "goes on being."
  • (2) Many of his adherents simply dismiss the damaging stories about Trump as “fake news” purveyed by a biased liberal media.
  • (3) Breezeblocks is the sort of idiosyncratic indie we'd imagine bands we've never heard such as Swell Maps or Arab Strap would have purveyed, affirming that there are quixotic imaginations at work here.
  • (4) Beads of the material that is commercially purveyed as Debrisan were used as a postoperative dressing after dermabrasion in 24 patients.
  • (5) The popular narrative – purveyed by the outraged, defiant, nouveau-Peckham youth vote – resists change.
  • (6) With similar acuity, the security expert Bruce Schneier homes in on the patronising cant about automated surveillance that is being purveyed by both intelligence agencies and internet companies.
  • (7) More informative are the vans purveying luxury services to the residents.
  • (8) Ed Miliband , the Labour leader, took a huge personal gamble by declaring war on probably the most influential newspaper in Britain accusing it of appalling lies by claiming his deceased father Ralph had hated Britain and purveyed a poisonous creed designed to destroy British institutions.
  • (9) In recent years, and during the campaign, the Osborne team relentlessly purveyed their own facts.
  • (10) Of all golden-age fallacies, none is dafter than that there was a time when politicians purveyed unvarnished truth.

Requisition


Definition:

  • (n.) The act of requiring, as of right; a demand or application made as by authority.
  • (n.) A formal demand made by one state or government upon another for the surrender or extradition of a fugitive from justice.
  • (n.) A notarial demand of a debt.
  • (n.) A demand by the invader upon the people of an invaded country for supplies, as of provision, forage, transportation, etc.
  • (n.) A formal application by one officer to another for things needed in the public service; as, a requisition for clothing, troops, or money.
  • (n.) That which is required by authority; especially, a quota of supplies or necessaries.
  • (n.) A written or normal call; an invitation; a summons; as, a reqisition for a public meeting.
  • (v. t.) To make a reqisition on or for; as, to requisition a district for forage; to requisition troops.
  • (v. t.) To present a requisition to; to summon request; as, to requisition a person to be a candidate.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) This result contraindicates a general permissive-requisite role for forebrain NE for the mammalian brain's plasticity during its critical periods.
  • (2) Swarming is a requisite for mating in populations of Aedes communis and Ae.
  • (3) It is considered that foetal maturity is the pre-requisite before a decision to induce should be made in practice, and 3 criteria are essential: 1) a gestational length of greater than 320 days, 2) substantial mammary development, 3) the presence of colostrum in the mammae.
  • (4) It appears that channel catfish B cell mIg capping, presumably a requisite for immune function, can be significantly affected by environmental temperatures; most likely such effects are attributable to changes in plasma membrane viscosities.
  • (5) A requisite step in the biosynthesis of tRNA is the removal of 5' leader sequences from tRNA precursors.
  • (6) The results show that COMT is the major extraneuronal noradrenaline-metabolizing enzyme of rabbit aorta, that inhibition of COMT is a pre-requisite for any corticosterone-sensitive accumulation of noradrenaline, that there are two important extraneuronal compartments (compartments III and IV; Henseling et al., 1976a), and that inhibitors of extraneuronal uptake inhibit both, influx and efflux of noradrenaline.
  • (7) In both non-aligned and head-aligned modes, subject instructions pertaining to the second target light concerned only gaze; there was no requisite head position.
  • (8) Critical non-hemolytic swelling with resulting stress on the membrane appears requisite to slow phase hemolysis since more non-penetrant sucrose is required to prevent slow phase lysis rather than that which would be predicted from the intracellular colloid osmotic pressure due to hemoglobin.
  • (9) Distinctions between normal age-related changes and disease signs and symptoms are explained to provide emergency department nurses with the requisite information to care for the elderly appropriately.
  • (10) A requisite level of linoleic acid is needed for this promotion.
  • (11) These results are consistent with the postulate that the general transcriptive and replicative control processes operating during development may involve changes in the level of the requisite polymerases.
  • (12) The influence of pH, algal concentration, and algal growth phase on the requisite cationic flocculant dose is also reported.
  • (13) To ascertain the actual state of dental health among the school population, with a view to taking the requisite preventive and corrective measures.
  • (14) The pre-requisite for running such a programme is a systematic approach to these attitudes among the staff, and the prescribing patterns by physicians.
  • (15) Comparison with the structure of papain-stefin B complex indicates that the structure of the Gln-Val-Val-Ala-Gly sequence itself is not necessarily the essential requisite for inhibitory activity.
  • (16) It is shown what this can look like and what are the pre-requisites and general conditions to achieve it.
  • (17) These data suggest that the phenolic hydroxyl of Tyr 248 does not act as the requisite general acid catalyst but participates in ligand binding.
  • (18) The requisite conformation for blocking dopamine uptake appears to be defined by the combination resulting from superimposition of the CP-24,441 and nomifensine structures.
  • (19) It is suggested on the basis of the structural similarity that these heptalaminar complexes of close plasmalemmal apposition represent the structural equivalent of gap junctions and may be sites of intercellular communication requisite for transmural passage.
  • (20) Accurate reconstructions of all capsular ligament lesions and the reinforcement by threads of the requisite connective tissue transplants, show good stability and a good overall result four years after the operation in a relatively small number of patients.